
Tournament Dreams College Basketball - GAME - (CURRENT ED w/ 2024-25 Rosters)
Tournament Dreams College Basketball (TDCB), a dynamic simulation that brings the sport of college basketball to life in a fun, fast paced, and statistically accurate game. TDCB is a fast paced, play-by-play simulation, that allows you to watch and coach real teams and players in simulated college basketball action. Each version includes the TDCB Stat Manager that allows the saving of game stats and deep statistical reports for each team, player and replay.
*** EACH VERSION OF TOURNAMENT DREAM COLLEGE BASKETBALL AUTOMATICALLY INCLUDES THE MOST RECENT SEASON TEAM AND ROSTER DATA. CURRENT VERSION COMES WITH THE 2024-25 COLLEGE SEASON. OTHER SEASONS ARE AVAILBLE FOR PURCHASE SEPARATELY ***
The 2024–25 men’s college basketball season featured high drama, emergent stars, and an NCAA Tournament finale for the ages. The Florida Gators captured the national title — their third in program history — edging out Houston 65–63 in a thrilling championship game in San Antonio. Walter Clayton Jr. was named Most Outstanding Player after a clutch performance in the final. Houston had a remarkable season, finishing 35–5, winning both the Big 12 regular season and tournament titles, and making a late push in the tournament before falling just short in the final. On the individual front, freshman phenom Cooper Flagg was the consensus National Player of the Year, dazzling fans with his two-way impact throughout the season and anchoring Duke’s dominance in the ACC and nationally. The tournament produced its share of surprises: Florida’s path to the title included wins over Norfolk State, defending champion UConn, Maryland, Texas Tech, and Auburn. UConn’s bid for a third consecutive championship ended earlier than hoped. Despite strong regular-season expectations, several blue-blood programs fell short in March. The ACC, in particular, underwhelmed outside Duke. Florida’s dramatic comeback in the title game — overcoming a double-digit second-half deficit — and Houston’s near-miss cemented this season among the most memorable in recent memory.
Tournament Dreams College Basketball (TDCB), a dynamic simulation that brings the sport of college basketball to life in a fun, fast paced, and statistically accurate game. TDCB is a fast paced, play-by-play simulation, that allows you to watch and coach real teams and players in simulated college basketball action. Each version includes the TDCB Stat Manager that allows the saving of game stats and deep statistical reports for each team, player and replay.
*** EACH VERSION OF TOURNAMENT DREAM COLLEGE BASKETBALL AUTOMATICALLY INCLUDES THE MOST RECENT SEASON TEAM AND ROSTER DATA. CURRENT VERSION COMES WITH THE 2024-25 COLLEGE SEASON. OTHER SEASONS ARE AVAILBLE FOR PURCHASE SEPARATELY ***
The 2024–25 men’s college basketball season featured high drama, emergent stars, and an NCAA Tournament finale for the ages. The Florida Gators captured the national title — their third in program history — edging out Houston 65–63 in a thrilling championship game in San Antonio. Walter Clayton Jr. was named Most Outstanding Player after a clutch performance in the final. Houston had a remarkable season, finishing 35–5, winning both the Big 12 regular season and tournament titles, and making a late push in the tournament before falling just short in the final. On the individual front, freshman phenom Cooper Flagg was the consensus National Player of the Year, dazzling fans with his two-way impact throughout the season and anchoring Duke’s dominance in the ACC and nationally. The tournament produced its share of surprises: Florida’s path to the title included wins over Norfolk State, defending champion UConn, Maryland, Texas Tech, and Auburn. UConn’s bid for a third consecutive championship ended earlier than hoped. Despite strong regular-season expectations, several blue-blood programs fell short in March. The ACC, in particular, underwhelmed outside Duke. Florida’s dramatic comeback in the title game — overcoming a double-digit second-half deficit — and Houston’s near-miss cemented this season among the most memorable in recent memory.